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Health & Fitness

Feel-Good Fun: The First Little Free Library in Pacific Palisades

I am happy to report Palisades PRIDE has installed its first Little Free Library. Read about how this small addition to our community has the potential to do powerfully good things.

You may have not noticed, but there is a new stranger in our town, a cute little house on a pole called a Little Free Library. It's a public book exchange that is completely free form, no rules. Put in a book or take out a book. There's no obligation to return one or put one in. It's totally organic. Here is what NBC Nightly News has to say about the Little Free Library.

Since that TV news report a lovely article in the Los Angeles Times was featured on the front page in June. Southern California is discovering the magic I knew these little book exchanges would bring our way.

Last year I learned about the Little Free Library from my friend . He started noticing them show up in his town of Madison, Wisconsin and was filled with delight. Ironically, one of the founders of Little Free Library, Rick Brooks, was Parker's sociology student.

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As soon as I heard about these book exchanges, I knew I had to see one here in Pacific Palisades. So I began to plant seeds for this idea anywhere I could: friends, organizations, wherever. Finally, to my joy Palisades PRIDE fell in love with the concept, and now the first Little Free Library stands on Monument Street a block up from Sunset Blvd.

At the time I told Palisades PRIDE about the Little Free Library, I also told a friend. Being handy with tools, he immediately built one and put it in front of his house. His social life has been blossoming since. One neighbor told him, "This is just what our neighborhood needs!" I also have told folks about the Little Free Library in Mar Vista and Culver City, and now they are popping up there. In June I was invited to a Little Free Library woodworking workshop in Venice. While there I was told I may have been the catalyst for the Little Free Library phenomenon in our region. I am very proud of this honor.

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The beauty of the Little Free Library is you have the option to order one through the nonprofit organization or you are provided free plans online, and you can build your own. If you build your own, you may obtain a free sign from the organization with your own unique charter number affixed on it, so that you can be part of the Little Free Library international database. Some of the proceeds of your purchase go to a pay-it-forward scholarship fund to provide libraries to the underprivileged. If you are comfortable having the GPS coordinates of the location of your Little Free Library on Google maps, you can register your library for $25 and send a photograph with a story about your Little Free Library, and the organization will display your photograph and story online for the world to see.

Interestingly, Little Free Libraries rarely get vandalized. My friend and I suspect it is because they bring out the good in people. Given that, I sense these little libraries may be an excellent crime deterrent for neighborhoods. In my piece , I wrote that barren streets are an invitation to crime, because there are no witnesses. However, these little libraries draw people out of their homes to congregate. How much more feel-good can you get than that?

I have many ideas of how these little libraries can benefit the community. They can do wonders for our local economy by the work they can provide carpenters and artists. A percentage of those sales can be donated to Friends of the Library as an ad hoc to their used book sales. Recently, I had a cool idea of some being built with working solar panels on the roof with an LED light bulb inside as a way to both promote the and literacy at the same time. If I told you all the ideas I have, this blog post would never end. It seems this Little Free Library is a gift that just keeps giving.

I would really like to see a Little Free Library dedicated to someone who deserves it more than anyone, Katie O'Laughlin of Village Books. It is only fitting that she be honored in this way for the contribution of her bookstore to the community and her profound passion for books. Certainly, the magic that was lost when her store closed can never be replaced, but it is my hope that some of that magic can be revived in these libraries. I have a vision of a community unveiling of a Little Free Library dedicated to her. She would be sitting in front of it with community members handing their favorite books to her as she puts them inside, just as she lovingly handed books to us, many of which became our favorites.

The Little Free Library is not meant as a place to dump magazines or unloved books. It is a repository for the books we love and cherish that we wish to share. It is akin to community members sending love letters to one another. So put those books sacred to you into the book exchange and donate the rest to benefit our public library.

When I have suggested the Little Free Library to organizations, I often am asked, “What’s the difference between this and our public library?” No matter how many Little Free Libraries show up in our community they can never compete with the sheer volume of our public library system, and they are not meant to. Rather, by promoting literacy and the physical book, they promote our library system by offering small samples as a reminder of the treasures sitting on their shelves. You may be so lucky as to find a new author because of the Little Free Library—which will then prompt you to seek more of that author's works in the vast storehouse of our public library system. Everybody wins.

Recently a woman shared with me that her daughter is often at home without friends. I did not think of it at the time, but after we spoke it occurred to me to suggest they install a Little Free Library in front of their house. It can literally change a life overnight, because it draws people to you and brings happiness. It's a great remedy for our isolating modern world and far better than Facebook, because it brings you outside into the physical providing connections of substance rather than virtual ones.

What is totally unique about the Little Free Library than anything I have ever encountered is it offers the beauty of the community sharing the gift of books with no strings attached. My experience is even when gifts are given there is a sense of strings or obligation of some kind. We feel obligated to like the gift or return the favor to the giver. However, since these gifts are offered anonymously, we can do as we wish with them. We can keep them. We can give them to a friend. We can even donate them to Friends of the Library. Anything goes.

This may be very hard to understand, because our brains have not been wired to this way of selfless giving and receiving; however, as we adjust to this form of gift exchange whole new neural-tracks in our brain may develop—showing up in greater generosity. These book exchanges have the power to potentially make us better people. Rather than Facebook that provides chemical rushes to the brain; the Little Free Library provides chemical rushes to the heart. I call that love.

I was so excited the day I deposited my first book. It was clear to me it had to be Parker Palmer's Healing the Heart of Democracy, a book that fully embraces what the Little Free Library represents. I told him of my intentions, and he kindly sent me a complimentary copy. Days before I did it, I learned about Bookcrossing.com, an online tracking system for books you give away. Like the Little Free Library, you are assigned a unique number for every book you register and affix it to the book, and then watch where it travels as others journal about it. It added another feel-good layer to the Little Free Library. I was bubbling over with joy as I affixed the Bookcrossing sticker on Parker's book. Then I went to the little library, deposited it, and wished it well on its travels.

Finally, has become a seedling. I thank Palisades PRIDE for being fertile ground for this seed in this garden I call community. You've started something beautiful that is only just beginning.

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The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?